Iran escalating efforts to destabilize region: Panetta

Washington: Outgoing US Defence Secretary Leon Panetta accused Iran of an intensified campaign to destabilize the Middle East by smuggling anti-aircraft weapons to militant allies, The Wall Street Journal reported on February 2.

"There is no question when you start passing MANPADS around, that becomes a threat, not just to military aircraft but to civilian aircraft," Panetta told the newspaper in an interview. "That is an escalation."

Yemeni forces intercepted a ship carrying a large cache of weapons that US suspect were being smuggled from Iran.

MANPADS are shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles. Western officials have worried about the spread of such weapons and the risk they pose to airline passengers as well as to military helicopters and jets.

Yemeni forces intercepted a ship on January 23 carrying a large cache of weapons - including surface-to-air missiles - that US officials suspect were being smuggled from Iran and destined for Yemeni insurgents. "It is one of the first times we have seen it," Panetta said, referring to the seizure of MANPADS.

A Defence Department spokesman was not immediately available for comment on Panetta's remarks to the paper. Yemen's government said the arms intercepted aboard the ship off the country's coast also included military-grade explosives, rocket-propelled grenades and bomb-making equipment.

Iran denies any interference in Yemen's affairs.

Panetta said the United States was stepping up efforts to counter the Iranian threat, and was leading a multinational exercise in the United Arab Emirates through January 31 to improve the interdiction of Iranian arms and other weapons. He called the exercise critical to building up Arab capabilities to help halt Iranian arms transfers, including the smuggling of MANPADS.

US officials have said the anti-aircraft weapons intercepted on January 23 likely were headed to northern Yemen's Houthi separatists, who are fighting the US.-backed government in Sanaa and have also clashed with Saudi forces.

Panetta is preparing to step down as Defence Secretary after 19 months in the job. The Senate Armed Services Committee held a hearing on January 31 on the nomination of former Republican Senator Chuck Hagel to succeed Panetta.